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Influence des glycines du lien S4-S5 sur le couplage électromécanique des canaux ioniques dépendants du voltageBarreto, Sandra 03 1900 (has links)
Les canaux potassiques dépendants du voltage sont formés de quatre sous-unités, chacune possédant six segments transmembranaires (S1-S6) et une boucle (p-loop) qui se trouve entre le cinquième et le sixième segment au niveau du pore. Il est connu que le segment senseur du voltage (S1-S4) subit un mouvement lorsque le potentiel membranaire change. Pour ouvrir le canal, il est nécessaire de transférer l'énergie du senseur du voltage (généré par le mouvement des charges positives de S4) au pore. Le mécanisme exact de ce couplage électromécanique est encore sous étude. Un des points de liaison entre le senseur de voltage et le pore est le lien physique fait par le segment S4-S5 (S45L). Le but de cette étude est de déterminer l'influence de la flexibilité du segment S45L sur le processus de couplage. Dans le S45L, trois glycines sont distribuées dans des positions différentes. Elles sont responsables de la flexibilité des hélices-alpha. Ces glycines (mais pas leurs positions exactes) sont conservées pour tous les canaux potassiques dépendants de potentiel. En utilisant la technique de mutagènes dirigé, la glycine a été remplacée dans chacune de ces différentes positions par une alanine et dans une deuxième étape, par une proline (pour introduire un angle dans l'hélice). Pour étudier le comportement des canaux dans cette nouvelle conformation, on a appliqué la technique de « patch clamp » pour déterminer les effets lors de l'ouverture du pore (courant ionique). Avec le « cut-open oocyte voltage-clamp », nous avons étudié les effets sur le mouvement du senseur de voltage (courant “gating”) et la coordination temporelle avec l'ouverture du pore (courant ionique). Les données ont montré qu’en réduisant la flexibilité dans le S45L, il faut avoir plus d'énergie pour faire ouvrir le canal. Le changement pour une proline suggère que le mouvement du senseur est indépendant du pore pendant l'ouverture du canal. / Voltage-gated potassium channels are formed of four subunits, each one with six transmembrane segments (S1-S6) and a loop (p-loop) between S5 and S6 at the level of the pore. It is known that the voltage sensitive segment (S1-S4) undergoes a movement upon membrane potential changes. To open the channel, it is necessary to transfer the energy of the voltage sensor (generated by the displacement of the positive charges of S4) to the pore. The exact mechanism of this “electromechanical coupling” is still under investigation. The voltage sensor and pore are physically linked by the S4-S5 linker (S45L). The aim of this study is to determine the influence of S45L flexibility on the coupling process. In the S45L, three glycines are distributed at different positions and are responsible for the flexibility of the alpha-helix. These glycines (but not their exact position) are conserved within the potassium voltage-gated ion channels. The glycines were each replaced by an alanine using point mutagenesis. In a second step, a proline was introduced at the position in order to introduce a break in the helix. To study the behaviour of channels in this new conformation, we used the patch clamp technique to determine the effects during the pore opening (ionic current). With the cut-open voltage-clamp we determined the effects on voltage sensor movement (gating current) as well as the temporal correlation with the pore opening (ionic current). The data showed that when the flexibility of the S45L is reduced, the channel needs more energy to open. Exchange with proline suggests that the movement of the sensor is independent of pore opening.
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Plasticité synaptique dans l’aire tegmentaire ventrale : implication des endocannabinoïdesKortleven, Christian 12 1900 (has links)
Le système dopaminergique (DA) méso-corticolimbique du cerveau, qui prend son origine dans l'aire tegmentaire ventrale (ATV), est fortement impliqué dans les comportements motivés et la toxicomanie. Les drogues d'abus activent ce système et y induisent une plasticité synaptique de longue durée. Les neurones DA de l'ATV reçoivent sur leur arborisation dendritique une grande densité de terminaisons glutamatergiques. Les drogues d'abus induisent une potentialisation à long terme (PLT) de ces contacts glutamatergiques. La PLT est une augmentation prolongée de la transmission synaptique, qui semble sous-tendre la mémoire et l'apprentissage.
Les endocannabinoïdes (ECs) sont des neurotransmetteurs qui agissent de façon rétrograde sur des récepteurs présynaptiques (CB1) pour diminuer la libération des neurotransmetteurs comme le glutamate. Les neurones libèrent les ECs à partir de leur compartiment somatodendritique suite à une stimulation des afférences et la dépolarisation membranaire qui s’ensuit. La neurotensine (NT) est un neuropeptide retrouvé de façon abondante dans le système DA du cerveau. Il a été découvert que la NT peut induire la libération des ECs dans le striatum.
En faisant appel à une combinaison d’approches immunohistochimique, électrophysiologique et pharmacologique chez la souris, nous avons confirmé dans la première étude de cette thèse la présence des récepteurs CB1 sur les terminaisons glutamatergiques des neurones DA de l'ATV, et avons montré que leur activation induit une diminution de la libération de glutamate. Par ailleurs, nous avons montré que des trains de stimulation peuvent induire la libération des ECs. Nous avons découvert qu'en présence d'un antagoniste des récepteurs CB1, il y a facilitation de l’induction de la PLT. Cette observation suggère que les ECs ont un effet inhibiteur sur l’induction de la PLT, plutôt que sur son expression. Nous avons déterminé que le 2-arachidonoylglycerol (2-AG) est l’EC qui est principalement responsable de cette action inhibitrice. Finalement, la PLT induite en présence d’un antagoniste CB1 est aussi dépendante d'une activation des récepteurs NMDA du glutamate.
Les travaux réalisés dans la deuxième étude de cette thèse ont montré que la NT est présente dans une sous-population de terminaisons axonales glutamatergiques dans l’ATV. Une application exogène de NT induit une diminution prolongée de l'amplitude des courants postsynaptiques excitateurs (CPSEs). Cette diminution est bloquée en présence d'un antagoniste non-sélectif des récepteurs à la NT, ainsi qu'en présence d'un antagoniste sélectif pour le récepteur de NT de type 1 (NTS1). Confirmant l’implication d’une production d’ECs, la baisse des CPSEs par la NT a été bloquée en présence d’un antagoniste des récepteurs CB1 ou d’un bloqueur de la synthèse de 2-AG. La chélation du calcium intracellulaire n'empêchait pas l’effet inhibiteur de la NT sur les CPSEs, cependant, l'inhibition des protéines G ou de la phospholipase C a complètement bloqué la dépression synaptique induite par la NT. Par ailleurs, nos travaux ont montré que la nature prolongée de la dépression synaptique induite par la NT exogène s’explique par une libération soutenue des ECs, et non pas à une activation prolongée des NTR. Finalement, notre observation qu’un antagoniste des récepteurs de la NT ne facilite pas l’induction de la PLT, comme le fait un antagoniste du récepteur CB1, suggère que la stimulation répétitive des afférences glutamatergiques nécessaire à l’induction de la PLT n’induit pas de libération des ECs via la libération de NT, nous permettant ainsi de conclure que la sécrétion de NT n'agit pas dans ces conditions comme un facteur de régulation négative de la PLT. / The meso-corticolimbic dopamine (DA) system of the brain, originating in the ventral tegmental area (VTA), is strongly implicated in reward, motivation and drug addiction. Drugs of abuse activate this system and cause significant long term plasticity. DA neurons in the VTA receive are densely innervated by glutamatergic inputs. All major classes of drugs of abuse have been found to cause a long term potentiation (LTP) of glutamate transmission onto DA neurons of the VTA. LTP is an enduring increase of synaptic transmission, hypothesized to underlie memory and learning.
Endocannabinoids (ECs) are transmitters that act in a retrograde fashion on pre-synaptic receptors leading to a decrease in neurotransmitter release. DA neurons can release ECs from their somatodendritic compartment in response to afferent stimulation or depolarization. Neurotensin (NT) is a neuropeptide that presents an extensive interaction with the DA system. It was discovered that NT can induce production of ECs in the striatum.
In the first study of this thesis, we used a combination of immunohistochemical, pharmacological and electrophysiological techniques in mouse brain slices to demonstrate that CB1 EC receptors are present on glutamatergic afferents to DA neurons. Their activation induces a depression of glutamate release. We further showed that trains of afferent stimulation induce EC release from DA neurons and that in the presence of the CB1 antagonist AM251, there is a marked facilitation of the induction of LTP, suggesting that ECs produced in response to activation of glutamate synapses normally negatively regulate the induction, but not the expression of LTP. Finally, we found that 2-arachidonoylglycerol (2-AG) is the main EC implicated in this negative regulation of LTP and that LTP induced in the presence of a CB1 receptor antagonist is otherwise also dependent on NMDA glutamate receptors.
In the second study, we report that NT is present in a subset of glutamatergic axon terminals in the VTA and that activation of NT receptors by exogenous NT induces a long-lasting decrease of the amplitude of excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) in VTA DA neurons. This decrease was blocked by a broad-spectrum NTR antagonist, as well as by a specific antagonist of the type 1 NT receptor NTS1. The decrease was also blocked when CB1 receptors or 2-AG synthesis were blocked. Chelating intracellular calcium had no effect, but inhibiting G-proteins or phospholipase C blocked NT-mediated synaptic depression. The long-lasting nature of the synaptic depression induced by NT was due to protracted EC release and not to prolonged NT receptor activation. Finally, our observation that a NT receptor antagonist did not facilitate LTP induction, as did a CB1 receptor antagonist, suggests that repetitive stimulation of glutamatergic afferents required to induce LTP does not cause EC production through the release of NT, thus allowing us to conclude that secretion of NT does not act under such conditions as a negative regulator of LTP.
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Elaboration and Design of α7 nAChR Negative Allosteric ModulatorsAlwassil, Osama I. 01 January 2015 (has links)
α7 Neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors are one of two major classes of receptors responsible for cholinergic neurotransmission in the central nervous system. The existence of α7 neuronal nAChRs in different regions of the nervous system suggests their involvement in certain essential physiological functions as well as in disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease (AD), drug dependence, and depression. This project was aimed toward the discovery and development of small–molecule arylguanidines that modulate α7 nAChR function with improved subtype-selectivity through an allosteric approach. Identifying the required structural features of these small molecules allowed optimization of their negative allosteric modulator (NAM) actions at α7 neuronal nAChRs. MD-354 (3-chlorophenylguanidine) was the first small–molecule NAM at α7 nAChRs; however, it also binds at 5-HT3 receptors. The N-methyl analog of MD-354 appeared to be more selective toward α7 nAChRs than 5-HT3 receptors. Comparative studies using two series of novel compounds based on MD-354 and its N-methyl analog explored the aryl 3-position and investigated whether or not the MD-354 series and the N-methyl series bind in the same manner. Biological potencies of the MD-354 series and the N-methyl series of compounds, obtained from electrophysiological assays with Xenopus laevis oocytes expressing human α7 nAChRs in two-electrode voltage-clamp assays, showed that N-(3-iodophenyl)-N- methylguanidine (28) is the most potent analog at α7 nAChRs. Our comparative study and Hansch analyses indicated different binding modes of the two series.
In addition, we investigated: i) the length/size of the aliphatic side chain at the anilinic nitrogen, ii) the effect of alkylating the guanidine nitrogen atoms, and iii) the necessity of the presence of these nitrogen atoms for the inhibitory effects of arylguanidines at α7 nAChRs.
In efforts to explain the varied functional activity of these arylguanidines, homology models of the extracellular domain and the transmembrane domain of human α7 nAChRs were developed, allosteric sites identified, and docking studies and hydropathic analysis conducted. The 3D quantitative structure-activity relationships for our compounds were also analyzed using CoMFA. A pharmacophore for arylguanidines as α7 nAChR NAMs was identified.
Together, these data should be useful for the subsequent design of novel arylguanidine analogs for their potential treatment of neurological disorders.
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Étude de l'oligomérisation et de la fonction de canaux ioniques par spectroscopie de fluorescence et fluorométrie en voltage imposéMcGuire, Hugo 04 1900 (has links)
La fonction des canaux ioniques est finement régulée par des changements structuraux de sites clés contrôlant l’ouverture du pore. Ces modulations structurales découlent de l’interaction du canal avec l’environnement local, puisque certains domaines peuvent être suffisamment sensibles à des propriétés physico-chimiques spécifiques. Les mouvements engendrés dans la structure sont notamment perceptibles fonctionnellement lorsque le canal ouvre un passage à certains ions, générant ainsi un courant ionique mesurable selon le potentiel électrochimique. Une description détaillée de ces relations structure-fonction est cependant difficile à obtenir à partir de mesures sur des ensembles de canaux identiques, puisque les fluctuations et les distributions de différentes propriétés individuelles demeurent cachées dans une moyenne. Pour distinguer ces propriétés, des mesures à l’échelle de la molécule unique sont nécessaires.
Le but principal de la présente thèse est d’étudier la structure et les mécanismes moléculaires de canaux ioniques par mesures de spectroscopie de fluorescence à l’échelle de la molécule unique. Les études sont particulièrement dirigées vers le développement de nouvelles méthodes ou leur amélioration. Une classe de toxine formeuse de pores a servi de premier modèle d’étude. La fluorescence à l’échelle de la molécule unique a aussi été utilisée pour l’étude d’un récepteur glutamate, d’un récepteur à la glycine et d’un canal potassique procaryote.
Le premier volet porte sur l’étude de la stœchiométrie par mesures de photoblanchiment en temps résolu. Cette méthode permet de déterminer directement le nombre de monomères fluorescents dans un complexe isolé par le décompte des sauts discrets de fluorescence suivant les événements de photoblanchiment. Nous présentons ici la première description, à notre connaissance, de l’assemblage dynamique d’une protéine membranaire dans un environnement lipidique. La toxine monomérique purifiée Cry1Aa s’assemble à d’autres monomères selon la concentration et sature en conformation tétramérique.
Un programme automatique est ensuite développé pour déterminer la stœchiométrie de protéines membranaires fusionnées à GFP et exprimées à la surface de cellules mammifères. Bien que ce système d’expression soit approprié pour l’étude de protéines d’origine mammifère, le bruit de fluorescence y est particulièrement important et augmente significativement le risque d’erreur dans le décompte manuel des monomères fluorescents. La méthode présentée permet une analyse rapide et automatique basée sur des critères fixes. L’algorithme chargé d’effectuer le décompte des monomères fluorescents a été optimisé à partir de simulations et ajuste ses paramètres de détection automatiquement selon la trace de fluorescence. La composition de deux canaux ioniques a été vérifiée avec succès par ce programme.
Finalement, la fluorescence à l’échelle de la molécule unique est mesurée conjointement au courant ionique de canaux potassiques KcsA avec un système de fluorométrie en voltage imposé. Ces enregistrements combinés permettent de décrire la fonction de canaux ioniques simultanément à leur position et densité alors qu’ils diffusent dans une membrane lipidique dont la composition est choisie. Nous avons observé le regroupement de canaux KcsA pour différentes compositions lipidiques. Ce regroupement ne paraît pas être causé par des interactions protéine-protéine, mais plutôt par des microdomaines induits par la forme des canaux reconstitués dans la membrane. Il semble que des canaux regroupés puissent ensuite devenir couplés, se traduisant en ouvertures et fermetures simultanées où les niveaux de conductance sont un multiple de la conductance « normale » d’un canal isolé. De plus, contrairement à ce qui est actuellement suggéré, KcsA ne requiert pas de phospholipide chargé négativement pour sa fonction. Plusieurs mesures indiquent plutôt que des lipides de forme conique dans la phase cristalline liquide sont suffisants pour permettre l’ouverture de canaux KcsA isolés. Des canaux regroupés peuvent quant à eux surmonter la barrière d’énergie pour s’ouvrir de manière coopérative dans des lipides non chargés de forme cylindrique. / The function of ion channels is finely regulated by structural changes of key domains controlling the pore opening. These structural modulations arise from interactions with the local environment, since several domains can be sensitive to specific physico-chemical properties. Movements generated in the structure become notably perceptible when channels open a passage for some ions, thus generating a measurable ionic current according to the electrochemical potential. A detailed description of these structure-function relationships is however difficult to obtain from measurements involving a set of identical channels, since the fluctuations and distributions of different individual properties remain hidden in an average. To differentiate these properties, single-molecule recordings are required.
The main purpose of this thesis is to study the structural aspects and molecular mechanisms of ion channels using fluorescence spectroscopy at the single-molecule level. Studies are oriented towards the development or improvement of new methods. A class of pore-forming toxin served as a first study model. Single-molecule fluorescence was also used to study an ionotropic glutamate receptor, a glycine receptor and a prokaryotic potassium channel.
The first part focuses on the study of stoichiometry using fluorescent subunit counting. This method allows a direct measure of the number of fluorescent monomers within a single complex by counting the number of step-wise fluorescence intensity decrease following photobleaching events. Here we present the first description, to our knowledge, of the dynamic assembly of a membrane protein in a lipid environment. The purified monomeric Cry1Aa toxin clusters with other monomers depending on the concentration and saturates in a tetrameric conformation.
An automated method has been developed to determine the stoichiometry of GFP-tagged membrane proteins expressed on mammalian cell surface. Although this expression system is suitable for the study of proteins of mammalian origin, background fluorescence is particularly important and significantly increases the risk of error in the manual counting process. The presented method allows a fast and automated analysis based on fixed criteria. The algorithm responsible for counting fluorescent monomers was optimized from simulations and adjusts its detection parameters automatically according to the fluorescence trace recording. The composition of two ion channels was successfully verified using this program.
Finally, single-molecule fluorescence is measured together with ionic current of KcsA channels using a voltage-clamp fluorometry setup. These combined recordings allowed us to describe the function of ion channels simultaneously to their position and density as they diffuse in a lipid membrane of defined composition. We observed clustering of KcsA channels for various lipid compositions. Clustering does not appear to be caused by protein-protein interaction, but rather by microdomains induced by the shape of reconstructed channels in the lipid bilayer. It seems that clustered KcsA channels could then become coupled, resulting in cooperative gating events with conductance levels multiple to the “normal” unitary channel conductance. Moreover, as opposed to what is currently suggested, KcsA does not require a negatively charged phospholipid for its function. Several of our recordings rather suggest that conically shaped lipids in the lamellar liquid crystalline phase are sufficient to allow single channel opening. Clustered channels can on the other hand overcome the energy barrier to open cooperatively in uncharged cylindrical lipids.
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MAPPING BRAIN CIRCUITS IN HEALTH AND DISEASEQiuyu Wu (6803957) 02 August 2019 (has links)
<p>Intricate neural circuits
underlie all brain functions. However, these neural circuits are highly
dynamic. The ability to change, or the plasticity, of the brain has long been
demonstrated at the level of isolated single synapses under artificial conditions.
Circuit organization and brain function has been extensively studied by
correlating neuronal activity with information input. The primary visual cortex
has become an important model brain region for the study of sensory processing,
in large part due to the ease of manipulating visual stimuli. Much has been
learned from studies of visual cortex focused on understanding the
signal-processing of visual inputs within neural circuits. Many of these
findings are generalizable to other sensory systems and other regions of
cortex. However, few studies have directly demonstrated the orchestrated
neural-circuit plasticity occurring during behavioral experience. </p>
<p>It is vital to
measure the precise circuit connectivity and to quantitatively characterize
experience-dependent circuit plasticity to understand the processes of learning
and memory formation. Moreover, it is important to study how circuit
connectivity and plasticity in neurological and psychiatric disease states
deviates from that in healthy brains. By understanding the impact of disease on
circuit plasticity, it may be possible to develop therapeutic interventions to
alleviate significant neurological and psychiatric morbidity. In the case of
neural trauma or ischemic injury, where neurons and their connections are lost,
functional recovery relies on neural-circuit repair. Evaluating whether neurons
are reconnected into the local circuitry to re-establish the lost connectivity
is crucial for guiding therapeutic development.</p>
<p>There are
several major technical hurdles for studies aiming to quantify circuit
connectivity. First, the lack of high-specificity circuit stimulation methods
and second, the low throughput of the gold-standard patch-clamp technique for
measuring synaptic events have limited progress in this area. To address these
problems, we first engineered the patch-clamp experimental system to automate
the patching process, increasing the throughput and consistency of patch-clamp
electrophysiology while retaining compatibility of the system for experiments
in <i>ex vivo </i>brain slices. We also took
advantage of optogenetics, the technology that enables control of neural
activity with light through ectopic expression of genetically encoded
photo-sensitive channels in targeted neuronal populations. Combining
optogenetic stimulation of pre-synaptic axonal terminals and whole-cell
patch-clamp recording of post-synaptic currents, we mapped the distribution and
strength of synaptic connections from a specific group of neurons onto a single
cell. With the improved patch-clamp efficiency using our automated system, we
efficiently mapped a significant number of neurons in different experimental
conditions/treatments. This approach yielded large datasets, with sufficient
power to make meaningful comparisons between groups.</p>
<p>Using this
method, we first studied visual experience-dependent circuit plasticity in the
primary visual cortex. We measured the connectivity of local feedback and
recurrent neural projections in a Fragile X syndrome mouse model and their
healthy counterparts, with or without a specific visual experience. We found
that repeated visual experience led to increased excitatory drive onto
inhibitory interneurons and intrinsically bursting neurons in healthy animals.
Potentiation at these synapses was absent or abnormal in Fragile X animals.
Furthermore, recurrent excitatory input onto regular spiking neurons within the
same layer remained stable in healthy animals but was depressed in Fragile X
animals following repeated visual experience. These results support the
hypothesis that visual experience leads to selective circuit plasticity which
may underlie the mechanism of visual learning. This circuit plasticity process
is impaired in a mouse model of Fragile X syndrome. </p>
<p>In a separate
study, in collaboration with the laboratory of Dr. Gong Chen, we applied the
circuit-mapping method to measure the effect of a novel brain-repair therapy on
functional circuit recovery following ischemic injury, which locally kills
neurons and creates a glial scar. By directly reprogramming astrocytes into
neurons within the region of the glial scar, this gene-therapy technology aims
to restore the local circuit and thereby dramatically improve behavioral
function after devastating neurological injury. We found that direct
reprogramming converted astrocytes into neurons, and importantly, we found that
these newly reprogrammed neurons integrated appropriately into the local
circuit. The reprogramming also improved connections between surviving endogenous
neurons at the injury site toward normal healthy levels of connectivity.
Connections formed onto the newly reprogrammed neurons spontaneously remodeled,
the process of which resembled neural development. By directly demonstrating
functional connectivity of newly reprogrammed neurons, our results suggest that
this direct reprogramming gene-therapy technology holds significant promise for
future clinical application to restore circuit connectivity and neurological
function following brain injury.</p>
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Signal transformation at the input and output of the Drosophila visual systemMorimoto, Mai January 2017 (has links)
A key function of the nervous system is to sample data from the external world, generate internal signals, and transform them into meaningful information that can be used to trigger behaviour. In order to gain insight into the underlying mechanism for signal transformation, the visual system has been extensively studied: partly owing to the stimulus being reliably presentable, and the anatomy being well described. The Drosophila visual system is one such system, with the added advantage of genetic tractability. In this thesis, I studied the filtering property of visual neurons at two levels, biophysical and circuit levels. The first study looks at signal transformation at the biophysical level, at the input of the visual system, in photoreceptors. Voltage-gated potassium channels counteract the depolarization caused by opening of light sensitive channels, and the heterogeneous properties of their kinetics can fine-tune the photoreceptor’s frequency response to fulfill the animal’s ecological requirements. Shaker (Kv1) and Shab (Kv2) have been identified as fast and slow inactivating components of the photoreceptor’s outward currents, however a current with intermediate kinetics (IKf) has not been molecularly identified, but had been postulated to be Shal (Kv4). I focused on characterizing this current using whole-cell patch clamp in wild type and mutants, and using antibodies for Shal. My results from whole-cell patch clamp indicated that IKf in adult R1-6 cells are not Shal, from their voltage dependence and insensitivity to a Kv4 blocker. This calls for alternative molecular basis for IKf, which is likely to be a slow inactivating component of Shaker, or a combination of its many splice variants. The second study looks at signal transformation at the circuit level, at the output end, in the third optic neuropil, lobula. Visual projection neurons project from the lobula to the central brain, and have been proposed to carry behaviourally relevant visual features to higher brain regions. It was recently shown that optogenetic activation of individual visual projection neuron types could induce distinct behaviours such as takeoff and backward walking, linking these visual neurons to specific behavioural programs downstream. Using in vivo two-photon calcium imaging, I recorded visually evoked calcium responses from three of these cell types. Cell types that showed induced takeoff and backward walking preferentially responded to dark looming stimuli or fragmented expanding local features, suggesting their role in behaviours triggered by object approach. To explore how this visual information is transformed in the downstream circuit, we identified several candidate neurons that receive input from this cell type by anatomical overlap, and then validated their connections using optogenetic activation and calcium imaging. One downstream cell-type that projects bilaterally had very similar response properties to its upstream partner, whereas another cell-type that projects ipsilaterally seemed to filter out some information from its upstream partner. This is one of the first studies that functionally characterizes lobula visual projection neurons and their downstream partners in Drosophila, and their response properties agree with the general idea that visual information becomes increasingly selective as it is sent to higher brain regions.
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A study of Kv channel dynamics using a fluorescent unnatural amino acidKalstrup, Tanja 10 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Muscle Hypertrophy in Prediabetic Men After 16 Wk of Resistance TrainingStuart, Charles A., Lee, Michelle L., South, Mark A., Howell, Mary E. A., Stone, Michael H. 29 June 2017 (has links)
Resistance training of healthy young men typically results in muscle hypertrophy and a shift in vastus lateralis composition away from type IIx fibers to an increase in IIa fiber content. Our previous studies of 8 wk of resistance training found that many metabolic syndrome men and women paradoxically increased IIx fibers with a decrease in IIa fibers. To confirm the hypothesis that obese subjects might have muscle remodeling after resistance training very different from healthy lean subjects, we subjected a group of nine obese male volunteers to progressive resistance training for a total of 16 wk. In these studies, weight loss was discouraged so that muscle changes would be attributed to the training alone. Detailed assessments included comparisons of histological examinations of needle biopsies of vastus lateralis muscle pretraining and at 8 and 16 wk. Prolonging the training from 8 to 16 wk resulted in increased strength, improved body composition, and more muscle fiber hypertrophy, but euglycemic clamp-quantified insulin responsiveness did not improve. Similar to prior studies, muscle fiber composition shifted toward more fast-twitch type IIx fibers (23 to 42%). Eight weeks of resistance training increased the muscle expression of phosphorylated Akt2 and mTOR. Muscle GLUT4 expression increased, although insulin receptor and IRS-1 expression did not change. We conclude that resistance training of prediabetic obese subjects is effective at changing muscle, resulting in fiber hypertrophy and increased type IIx fiber content, and these changes continue up to 16 wk of training.
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REGULATION OF HCN CHANNEL FUNCTION BY DIRECT cAMP BINDING AND SINGLET OXYGENIdikuda, Vinaykumar 01 January 2018 (has links)
Hyperpolarization-activated, cyclic-nucleotide gated ion channels (HCN channels) are activated by membrane hyperpolarization and modulated by cyclic nucleotides. HCN channels are important to maintain the resting membrane potential and input resistance in neurons and have important physiological functions in the brain and heart. Four mammalian HCN isoforms, HCN1-4, and the isoform cloned from sea urchin, spHCN, have been extensively studied. Among these, only spHCN channel shows a voltage dependent inactivation. Previous studies have shown that the ligand binding in mHCN2 channel is activity dependent: cAMP binding increases along with channel opening or channels in the open state have higher binding affinity for cAMP. But to date, information pertaining to the ligand binding to an inactivated ion channel or desensitized receptor is lacking. To address this gap, we used fluorescently labelled cAMP analogues in conjunction with patch clamp fluorometry (PCF) to study the ligand binding to the spHCN channel in various conformational states. We show that inactivated spHCN channel shows reduced binding affinity for cAMP, compared to that of the closed or open channel. Parallelly, we noticed significant changes to channel function when a combination of laser and photosensitizer was used to study ligand binding. A reactive oxygen species called singlet oxygen has been confirmed to be the major player in this process. Both photo-dynamically generated and chemically generated singlet oxygen modifies spHCN channel by removing the inactivation. The effect of singlet oxygen on channel can be abolished by the mutation of a key histidine (H462) residue in the ion conducting pore. Taken together, these two projects expanded our understanding about the physicochemical nature of fluorophores from two aspects: (i) the release of photon as a valuable tool to study the conformational dynamics in proteins; (ii) the generation of singlet oxygen as an effective modulator of protein function.
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Cellular interaction in the cardiac pacemaker: a modelling studyCloherty, Shaun Liam, Graduate School of Biomedical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, UNSW January 2005 (has links)
In mammalian hearts, initiation of the heartbeat occurs in a region of specialised pacemaker cells known as the sinoatrial node (SAN). The SAN is a highly complex spatially distributed structure which displays considerable cellular heterogeneity and is subject to complex electrotonic interactions with the surrounding atrial tissue. In this study, biophysically detailed ionic models of central and peripheral SAN pacemaker cells are described. These models are able to accurately reproduce experimental recordings of the membrane potential from central and peripheral SAN tissue. These models are used to investigate frequency synchronisation of electrically coupled cardiac pacemaker cells. Based on simulation results presented, it is proposed that cellular heterogeneity in the SAN plays an important role in achieving rhythm coordination and possibly contributes to the efficient activation of the surrounding atrial myocardium. This represents an important, previously unexplored, mechanism underlying pacemaker synchronisation and cardiac activation in vivo. A spatial-gradient model of action potential heterogeneity within the SAN is then formulated using a large-scale least squares optimisation technique. This model accurately reproduces the smooth spatial variation in action potential characteristics observed in the SAN. One and two dimensional models of the intact SAN are then formulated and three proposed models of SAN heterogeneity are investigated: 1) the discrete-region model, in which the SAN consists of a compact central region surrounded by a region of transitional pacemaker cells, 2) the gradient model, in which cells of the SAN exhibit a smooth variation in properties from the centre to the periphery of the SAN, and 3) the mosaic model, in which SAN and atrial cells are scattered throughout the SAN region with the proportion of atrial cells increasing towards the periphery. Simulation results suggest that the gradient model achieves frequency entrainment more easily than the other models of SAN heterogeneity. The gradient model also reproduces action potential waveshapes and a site of earliest activation consistent with experimental observations in the intact SAN. It is therefore proposed that the gradient model of SAN heterogeneity represents the most plausible model of SAN organisation.
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